Welcome to Type Network

Great type for great design.

Type Network is a growing alliance of the best independent type designers and foundries from around the world. From elegant scripts to editorial superfamilies and everything in between, we’ve got the right type for any project. Start browsing our collection now to explore our diverse range of typefaces.

New Hero unleashed

Like any superhero worth their salt, Newlyn’s powerful geometric sans is dedicated to civic duty. Efficient and practical yet dynamic and detailed, New Hero delivers mission-critical messages over 20 styles, from the crystalline Hairline to the über-punchy Super.

TN on TKM

Type Network is a partner in the new Adobe Typekit Marketplace. Creative Cloud users now have access to great type from our foundry partners. In celebration, we’ve devised a brain-twisting type ID contest. Correctly name all 21 fonts, and you could win a customized TN prize pack.

Meno comes of age

An early Richard Lipton classic expands to a typographic powerhouse in 78 styles. With three optical sizes, two additional widths, alternate forms, swashes, and many other features, Meno offers a complete solution for high-end typography.

Embury Text

Victoria Rushton’s latest typeface was designed with words in mind. Contrasting features like soft curves, sharp end strokes, exaggerated oval counters, and punched-in slab-like serifs play subtly off of each other, offering an unexpectedly immersive reading experience.

Type-Ø-Tones originals now on Type Network

Spain‘s charming Type-Ø-Tones offer a range of typeface designs from elegant scripts-with-a-twist to finely-tuned modern text families. We’re delighted to welcome Laura and Josema and company to their home on Type Network.

Newlyn typefaces now on Type Network

Through his namesake foundry, Miles Newlyn offers high-quality type designs crafted for solo creatives, multinational brands, and everyone in between. We’re pleased to welcome this gifted designer and his unique library to Type Network.

Type Network welcomes the Type-Ø-Tones

The Type-Ø-Tones are now part of Type Network. Since the early 1990s, this independent Spanish foundry has delivered original typefaces built with warmth and passion. Shown here: Multi, Guapa and DINosaur.

Forma DJR

Originally released in 1968 by the Italian foundry Nebiolo, Forma was designed to be a more mature and humane neo-grotesque. Roger Black and DJR revived the face, focusing on its retro printed appearance and super-tight spacing.

Type Network welcomes Newlyn

Newlyn is now part of Type Network. This independent foundry features original typefaces by Miles Newlyn, a celebrated designer known for extreme experimentation as well as clean, crisp creations. Shown here: New Frank.

Kontour typefaces now on Type Network

A New Leak-proof Sans Serif

In Gasket, Cyrus Highsmith drew on his unique graphic sensibilities and long experience as a type designer. The series moves with a gentle hop thanks to its slight slant and subtly staggered endings. The letterforms are amiable, simple, and distinctive.

Farnham Headline

A welcome addition to the Fleischman-inspired design by Christian Schwartz, Farnham Headline moves the magazine-friendly family in a subtly more serious direction. Weighty enough for front-page news, Farnham‘s headline cut still sparkles, bringing energetic elegance to page or screen.

You are here.

Scout is a utilitarian sans serif series you can’t quite place. Cyrus Highsmith drew the typeface in 2006 for the headlines of Entertainment Weekly. He followed in 2013 with Scout RE, four styles optimized for screen text and small sizes in print. Now there’s Scout Text, for everything in between.

Proforma

Originally designed to add elegance and functionality to forms, Proforma and its companion sans, Productus, work together to give you a complete system for corporate design. Six weights, roman & italic.

Bodega Sans & Serif

One of Font Bureau’s first typefaces, Greg Thompson’s Bodega set out to be an Art Deco revival. In subsequent decades it’s become a pop classic. With Bodega Serif, the style has wonderful adaptability – depending only on the needs and the skill of the designer who uses it.